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Using DNA to Reunite the Clan Gregor

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James Stuart, known as King James VI in Scotland and King James the I in England and Ireland, issued an edict in 1603 that abolished the surname MacGregor and declared that everyone named MacGregor or Gregor must renounce the name or suffer death, all in response to the murder of the King’s Forester, who himself had hanged some MacGregors for poaching. A bounty of 1,000 merks (apparently a great deal of money) was placed on the heads of the clan leaders, with 100 merks for other members of the clan.

This the origin of Rob Roy, also known as Red MacGregor, or Robert Roy MacGregor. For the next 200 years The Clan Gregor endured this persecution. Men were killed while women and children were sold into slavery in the New World. Finally, in 1774, the Act of Proscription against the clan was repealed.

Now, the Clan Gregor Society has announced that they are using the latest tricks in DNA to reunite the MacGregor clan. Using the DNA profile of a known descendant of the line, the MacGregor’s of Glencarnoch, they have decided that they will “admit to full membership of the society anyone who can prove they share 31 out of the 37 DNA markers in common with the main MacGregor bloodline profiler - irrespective of their surname.”

Professor Richard McGregor, the chairman of the Clan Gregor Society of Scotland, said:

“The council has taken this decision in recognition of the fact that, as a result of Clan Gregor’s past turbulent history, individuals were required to assume names which were totally divorced from their actual clan, and although such name changes were often documented at the time, others were not. The council recognises the ancestors of some MacGregors chose not to return to the original clan name for a variety of reasons, and that advances in DNA testing now allows descendants of such individuals to be identified as belonging to the clan.”

I certainly hope the Clan Gregor Society has used at least two independent sources to identify the MacGregor DNA profile! Without verification it is impossible to say that the DNA profile they’re using is actually MacGregor. 300 or 400 years is a VERY long time which can allow lots of non-paternal events to occur.

This process will of course miss those MacGregor descendants who were not, according to their DNA, directly related to the Clan but had adopted the surname. There probably isn’t any way to identify those individuals, however. And naturally, the female MacGregors are lost here as well.

Thanks to the Genealogue!

6 Comments

  1. robert h mcgregor
    Posted 27 June 2007 at 8:50 am | Permalink

    Type your comment here.The Glencarnoch line, of which Malcolm - 2124 is a member, is the predominant existing line. About 40 persons have the characteristic mutation to 10 at 385a. It is this back mutation which characterizes other Erainn tribe clans in the Highlands who have a 10 at 391 and an 11 at 385a. This mutation is relatively recent, about 875 AD and ties the MacGregor line to the Colla Uais MacDonalds, the MacMillans, the Buchanans etc.

  2. sylvia gould
    Posted 29 August 2007 at 6:07 am | Permalink

    i have traced my family tree back to 1781.i am now a bit stuck. the surname is smith.from stewarton in ayrshire. my father used to tell me we were part of the magregor clan. i would like to have the dna testing but at the moment cannt afford it. any ideas of what i should do next. thanks sylvia

  3. Haris
    Posted 1 March 2008 at 7:08 am | Permalink

    I never knew that about the name Gregor..kinda funny cause I went to a school with one, but everyone just called him Greg..When I use clan hosting I never really put much thought into the origins of the word clan but the true meaning of the sense brings thoughts of ancestry and pride.

  4. garry vardon-smith
    Posted 6 July 2008 at 11:25 am | Permalink

    I too am a smith allegedly according to fasmily tales from the clan gregor due to an act of heroism on an ancestors part that was rewarded by the chieftain? How does that work and how can i trace my ancestors?? please.

  5. Posted 22 August 2008 at 12:00 pm | Permalink

    It’s quite remarkable, these days, the idea of utilizing the latest tricks in DNA to reconstruct genealogical lines. I find this all quite remarkable.

  6. brianna dail
    Posted 3 November 2008 at 7:42 pm | Permalink

    i am a very close family to king stuart,my grandma’s father carried the stuart named,then passed to her and her brother,she got married then it became dail then passed to my father then me.stuart’s son earl of galloway came to america when the british attacked and that formed my family,i beleive mine is the closest living family to king james stuart.

3 Trackbacks

  1. By Genomicron on 13 June 2007 at 2:12 pm

    links from Technoratimore than 100 and of which Gregory was one of the more obvious, became septs of Clan MacGregor. The ban on the name MacGregor was lifted in 1774, but the division into different septs remains. Today, my fellow DNA Network member Blaine Bettinger of The Genetic Genealogist reports on an effort by the Clan Gregor Society to use DNA to reunite the Clan MacGregor. The idea of the MacGregor DNA Project is to draw comparisons to a genetic profile from a known descendant of the chief’s line (known only as “kit 2124″). Anyone

  2. By The Children of the Mist Message Board on 20 June 2007 at 6:40 pm

    Kramer auto Pingback[…] all the discussion of DNA and geneology requests, this is an interesting article to review:http://www.thegeneticgenealogist.com/2007/06/13/using-dna-to-reunite-the-clan-gregor/Nice acknowledgement of the Septs and their relationship with the MacGregor surname. Any discussion […]

  3. Kramer auto Pingback[…] all the discussion of DNA and geneology requests, this is an interesting article to review:http://www.thegeneticgenealogist.com/2007/06/13/using-dna-to-reunite-the-clan-gregor/Nice acknowledgement of the Septs and their relationship with the MacGregor surname. Any discussion […]

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